Review Detail
4.8 8
Young Adult Fiction
237
Dance Dance Your Life Away
Overall rating
4.0
Plot
N/A
Characters
N/A
Writing Style
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A
Reader reviewed by Lexie
The second book literally picks up right where the first book ended. So I'll say it now--spoilers for the first book.
The
difficulties that Claire and co face in this book are definitely more
personal then the first book. Not just that its Shane's dad making
trouble, but also Eve's younger brother comes back (causing her
emotional problems aplenty), Shane's dad in general (causing emotional
AND physical problems), Michael has to make a choice he knows will
alienate his friends and Claire has to save her arch-enemy's life
(after that same arch-enemy AGAIN tries to kill her). I won't even
mention the Dance the title refers too because that's just better left
read then said.
Whereas the first one took time to set the scene
and lay out the players, the second book tosses you in head first. You
can't read this as a standalone or out of order. Events from the first
book are glossed over because its generally acknowledged by the
characters that they were there so why repeat it? Relationship
connections are acknowledged, but the pre-development isn't mentioned.
Claire is with Shane, Michael is with Eve, Monica killed Shane's sister
out of spite and wants Claire dead, Brandon screwed up Eve's life (in
so many ways) and Michael is half-ghost because Oliver tried to turn
him.
Because of a few factors time is a little bit wonky to
think about in terms of the book. It obviously passes, but because so
much happens in five or six days that pass in the book I finished
feeling like I had just watched a season of 24 (you know where in the
span of 24 hours the white house is bombed, a nuclear explosion happens
in America, terrorists are captured, new terrorists appear, a president
is assassinated, his vice-president is put into a coma and CTU is taken
over at least once?). If I think about it I think less then three
months have passed total for the series.
If you take out the life or death factor I could only hope so much happens to me in a three month span as it does for Claire.
I'm
still something of a Claire/Michael person honestly. She tells him
things she doesn't tell Eve or Shane (or she tells him first), he
trusts her in a way that he doesn't trust Eve or Shane and the two of
them just seem to click. I feel bad though because Eve deserves
happiness and obviously Michael gives her that. Shane/Claire I'm sold
on only in that he's pretty much the first guy that she's been
romantically interested or involved with so emotions run high. I don't
doubt that she cares about him and wants to be with him, I just doubt
that its a long term thing.
((reprinted here with the author's permission))
The second book literally picks up right where the first book ended. So I'll say it now--spoilers for the first book.
The
difficulties that Claire and co face in this book are definitely more
personal then the first book. Not just that its Shane's dad making
trouble, but also Eve's younger brother comes back (causing her
emotional problems aplenty), Shane's dad in general (causing emotional
AND physical problems), Michael has to make a choice he knows will
alienate his friends and Claire has to save her arch-enemy's life
(after that same arch-enemy AGAIN tries to kill her). I won't even
mention the Dance the title refers too because that's just better left
read then said.
Whereas the first one took time to set the scene
and lay out the players, the second book tosses you in head first. You
can't read this as a standalone or out of order. Events from the first
book are glossed over because its generally acknowledged by the
characters that they were there so why repeat it? Relationship
connections are acknowledged, but the pre-development isn't mentioned.
Claire is with Shane, Michael is with Eve, Monica killed Shane's sister
out of spite and wants Claire dead, Brandon screwed up Eve's life (in
so many ways) and Michael is half-ghost because Oliver tried to turn
him.
Because of a few factors time is a little bit wonky to
think about in terms of the book. It obviously passes, but because so
much happens in five or six days that pass in the book I finished
feeling like I had just watched a season of 24 (you know where in the
span of 24 hours the white house is bombed, a nuclear explosion happens
in America, terrorists are captured, new terrorists appear, a president
is assassinated, his vice-president is put into a coma and CTU is taken
over at least once?). If I think about it I think less then three
months have passed total for the series.
If you take out the life or death factor I could only hope so much happens to me in a three month span as it does for Claire.
I'm
still something of a Claire/Michael person honestly. She tells him
things she doesn't tell Eve or Shane (or she tells him first), he
trusts her in a way that he doesn't trust Eve or Shane and the two of
them just seem to click. I feel bad though because Eve deserves
happiness and obviously Michael gives her that. Shane/Claire I'm sold
on only in that he's pretty much the first guy that she's been
romantically interested or involved with so emotions run high. I don't
doubt that she cares about him and wants to be with him, I just doubt
that its a long term thing.
((reprinted here with the author's permission))
G
Guest
#1 Reviewer
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